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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150304T000000
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SUMMARY:Lewis &amp\; Clark's 1st Annual Middle East Studies Symposium
DESCRIPTION:\n The Middle East Initiative is proud to present… \;\n\n\n Lewis &amp\; Clark's 1st Annual Middle East Studies Symposium\n\n\n March 4-6th \;\n\n\n \; \;\n\n\n Wednesday 3/4\n\n\n \;\n\n\n From Morocco to the UAE (and everywhere in between): Student Research Panel\n\n\n Noa Raman\, Gabby Henrie\, Julia Duerst &amp\; Maia Erickson\n\n\n 11:30-1pm \;Albany Smith Hall \;(Refreshments provided)\n \n Keynote Lecture:\n\n\n Skyscrapers and Shadows: Reflections on an Ethnographic Research Trajectory in the Middle East\n\n\n Dr. Andrew Gardner\, University of Puget Sound\n\n\n 5-6:30pm \;Albany Smith Hall\n \n Around the Table: \;(Free) \;Open Dinner at the Co-Op\, Family Style\n\n\n and Q&amp\;A w/ Dr. Gardner facilitated by Anthro Club\n\n\n 7pm \;Rusty Nail Co-Op \;\n\n\n \;\n\n\n \;\n\n\n Thursday 3/5\n \n Conversations on Religion in the Middle East\n\n\n w/ Imam Al-Dahlimy\, Islamic Center of Portland\, Sahar Bassyouni\, Director of the Islamic School of Muslim \;Educational \;Trust &amp\; Ned Rosch\, Jewish Voice for Peace\n 2-3:20pm \;Gregg Pavilion \;(refreshments provided)\n \n Middle East Studies Faculty Roundtable\n w/ Prof. Oren Kosansky (SOAN)\, Prof. Paul Powers (RELS) &amp\; Prof Cyrus Partovi (IA) \;\n 4:30-6pm \;Gregg Pavilion \;(refreshments provided)\n\n\n Friday 3/6\n \n Conflict and Space: A Lecture on Modern Palestinian and Iraqi Literature\n\n\n w/ Dr. Yasmeen Hanoosh\, Portland State University &amp\; Ghayde Ghraowi\, University of Texas Austin\n 10:30-12pm \;Albany Smith Hall \;(refreshments provided)\n \n Film Screening of Encounter Point\n\n\n Reconciling grievances in the pursuit of peace in Israel/Palestine\n\n\n 5-6:30pm \;Miller 105 \;(pizza provided)\n\n\n \n\n\n \;\n\n\n \n
UID:20150304T080000Z-34628@www.lclark.edu
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150302T183730Z
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150305T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150305T130000
LOCATION:JRH 245
SUMMARY:SOAN COLLOQUIUM SERIES: Indigenous in the City: The Politics of Urban Mapuche Identity in Chile
DESCRIPTION:\n Indigenous in the City: The Politics of Urban Mapuche Identity in Chile presented by Assistant Professor of Sociology SARAH WARREN.\n\n\n This article analyzes the different ways that urban Mapuche organizations in Chile make sense of their urban location and argues that there are three central relationships between urbanity and Mapuche identity. Some organizations eschew the term "urban" preferring the notion that they are "just living in the city" which indicates a temporariness and a desire to return to rural areas. Others embrace their urban location\, using the Mapuche word "wariache" (people of the city) to describe themselves. Still others create a hybrid identity\, one that draws heavily on Mapuche traditions but that also incorporates the kinds of modern attributes associated with urbanity. These different ways of negotiating the relationship between urban location and Mapuche identity illustrate the complexity of claiming an identity whose authenticity is still deeply tied to traditional lands and rural existence.\n\n\n \;\n
UID:20150305T200000Z-33701@www.lclark.edu
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150227T202228Z
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150311T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150311T163000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
SUMMARY:Gender Studies Symposium Panel: Women\, Work and Health in South Asia
DESCRIPTION:\n Women\, Work and Health in South Asia\n\n\n \;Lamia Karim\, associate professor of anthropology\, University of Oregon\, "'Learning to Labor': Female Factory Labor in Bangladesh"\n\n\n Jennifer Aengst\, adjunct professor of anthropology\, Portland State University\, "Producing Contraception: Choice\, Trust\, and Women's Work"\n\n\n Melissa Tennyson\, instructor\, Portland Community College\, "Female Domestic Labor in Bangladesh"\n\n\n \;\n
UID:20150311T223000Z-33405@www.lclark.edu
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150219T185531Z
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150311T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150311T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chamber
GEO:45.4491800221964;-122.67096853569
SUMMARY:Gender Studies Symposium\, Keynote Presentation: Inderpal Grewal
DESCRIPTION:\n Keynote Presentation: \;Towards a Feminist Critique of the Advanced Neoliberal Security State\n\n\n Inderpal Grewal\, Yale University professor\, scholar of transnational/postcolonial feminisms\, globalization\, and human rights\n\n\n Introduced by Emily vanKoughnett\, L&amp\;C '15\n\n\n Presentation Abstract: This paper examines the specificities of neoliberal security in India\, and the relation between neoliberalism and the security state. \;The forms of protest that have emerged in recent years against the state\, one against sexual violence and one against corruption\, are useful in showing the ruptures of security\, the policing of protest through media productions\, and the necessity for critiques of power and authority that are\, again\, deeply transnational. \; I suggest that a more general argument about a global neoliberalism can obscure the particularities of masculine privilege and power\, and the inequalities between and within national contexts.\n
UID:20150312T020000Z-34538@www.lclark.edu
URL:/live/events/34529-gender-studies-symposium-keynote-presentation
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150226T205007Z
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150312T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150312T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, council chamber
GEO:45.4491800221964;-122.67096853569
SUMMARY:Gender Studies Symposium\, Keynote Presentation: Tracey Deutsch
DESCRIPTION:\n Keynote Presentation: Putting Consumption in Its Place: Gender\, Labor\, and Politics in Complicated Times\n\n\n Tracey Deutsch\, University of Minnesota professor\, scholar of critical food studies and women's roles in modern U.S. history\n\n\n Introduced by Claire Hinkley﻿\, L&amp\;C '15\n\n\n Presentation abstract: This talk offers a feminist analysis of consumption and consumer politics. \; Taking socialist-feminist theorizations and contemporary food politics as points of departure\, I ask what the possibilities are for a politics of consumption in the present day. \;How does the category of labor reframe the history of malls and supermarkets and what happens in those spaces? \; How do struggles for gender and sexual freedoms intersect with struggles over consumption and the economy? How might we view consumption as a site of instability and structure? \;Power and possibility? In these complicated times\, how can a feminist reading of shopping be helpful?\n
UID:20150313T020000Z-34537@www.lclark.edu
URL:/live/events/34531-gender-studies-symposium-keynote-presentation
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150226T205006Z
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150313T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150313T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, council chamber
GEO:45.4491800221964;-122.67096853569
SUMMARY:Gender Studies Symposium\, Keynote Presentation: Eric Stanley
DESCRIPTION:\n Keynote Presentation: Blood Lines: AIDS\, Affective Accumulation\, and Viral Labor\n\n\n Eric Stanley\, UC President's Postdoctoral Fellow in communication and critical gender studies\, University of California\, San Diego\n\n\n Introduced by Samson Harmon﻿\, L&amp\;C '16\n\n\n Presentation Abstract: \; If capital\, as Karl Marx has argued\, "lives only by sucking living labor\," what formations of value are reproduced through death? Or\, how might disability studies\, critiques of racial capitalism\, and queer theory help us argue that dead labor\, or necrocapital\, is central to the extraction of surplus value? \; Reading with an HIV-reagent bank run by the National Institutes of Health and ACT UP's 1992 "Ashes Action\," this talk tracks the massive wealth accumulated by global pharmaceutical companies and the structured abandonment of its viral laborers. It is in this interdiction of the money form and the biopolitical that the question of whom and what constitutes the human\, and who is ground into dust\, appears.\n
UID:20150314T020000Z-34541@www.lclark.edu
URL:/live/events/34536-gender-studies-symposium-keynote-presentation-eric
LAST-MODIFIED:20150226T205634Z
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